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Death toll for birds hitting buildings may be over 1 billion a year in US – report
Only 40% of birds survive collisions with windows, researchers say, suggesting that mortality rates are far higher than previously thought
Less than half of stunned or injured birds survive a collision with a window, research has found, pushing up estimates that more than 1 billion birds may die each year from flying into buildings in the US.
In a new study published on Wednesday in Plos One, researchers examined how many birds recovered in rehabilitative care after a building collision. Older estimates had assumed that most stunned birds would recover, but researchers found about 60% died, meaning the number killed by building strikes may be far higher than previously thought.
Continue reading...FEATURE: EU carbon intensity limits will be the bigger driver in cutting shipping fuel emissions
ANALYSIS: Piecing together Chile’s carbon pricing jigsaw could sharpen public policy
Pollination partners with forestry nonprofit subsidiary to support ARR carbon projects
400-year record heat threat to Great Barrier Reef
400-year record heat threat to Great Barrier Reef
Big fashion falls short of climate targets, new report finds
Hottest ocean temperatures in 400 years an ‘existential threat’ to the Great Barrier Reef, report finds
Researchers say coral analysis shows recent extreme temperatures would not have happened without greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuels
Ocean temperatures in the Great Barrier Reef are now the hottest in at least 400 years and are an “existential threat” to the planet’s unique natural wonder, according to new scientific research.
Scientists analysed long-lived corals in and around the reef that keep a record of temperature hidden in their skeleton and matched them to modern observations.
Continue reading...Aramco buys domestic carbon credits to lower shipment emissions
Rich-poor divisions threaten to delay and weaken next round of Paris pledges, report warns
Industry set to suck up lion’s share of Flanders’ ETS revenue out to 2030, report argues
FEATURE: Commonwealth promotes its model carbon tax, as CBAMs boost interest
Verra updates voluntary carbon REDD methodology to match CCP definition
Commodities giant abandons coal divestment plans as shareholders object
Think tank launches framework to scale nature investments in Global South
ACCU issuance hits new yearly record even as July trade slumps
US emissions monitoring company launches carbon credit trading platform, completes first transaction
Virgin Atlantic “100% sustainable aviation fuel” ad judged misleading
ANALYSIS: Voluntary carbon market welcomes ICVCM renewables decision, cites limited price impact
For those with power and rich donors – the AC is always on, even if it’s melting outside | George Monbiot
This has been a summer of extreme heat around the world. The Guardian is investigating how it harms our planet and leaves the world’s most vulnerable people exposed to its impact
A staple of dystopian science fictions is an inner sanctum of privilege and an outer world – chemical desert/airless waste/District 12 – peopled by the desperate poor. The insiders, living off the exploited labour of the outlands, are indifferent to the horrors beyond their walls. Well, here we are.
Even as extreme heat raged across the southern United States this summer, the governors of Florida and Texas struck down heat protections for outdoor workers. Construction companies and agricultural firms lobbied against the rights of workers to water, shade and rest breaks when temperatures soar – and Ron DeSantis and Greg Abbott, two men also lavishly funded by the fossil fuel industry, gave them what they wanted.
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